Kenny wrote:Kurieuo wrote: Face-to-face with logical arguments that rule such out such, then the burden of proof is on you to prove otherwise.
That is, to prove (1) Absolutely everything is contingent and there is nothing that has existed in and of itself that isn't contingent upon something other.
Absolutely everything? Does this include God? If not you might wanna change your wording.
That is, what
you're saying
(see end of my post here where I re-quote your exact words).
Kenny wrote:Kurieuo wrote:I submit argument based on the impossibility of an actual infinite
and argument based on the impossibility of the formation of an actual infinite by successive addition.
Doesn’t this contradict what you just said above? What am I missing?
How so? You just tweak them a little to apply to a hierarchical structure where there is a non-contingent foundation to everything else that is contingent upon something prior.
Ken wrote:Kurieuo wrote: What do you have to counter these and support your (1) above ?
I don’t think (1) represents my views.
What I wrote is simply a succinct restatement of your words:
- Does there have to be a great something that sits on top of everything else that isn’t contingent upon anything, but everything is in one way or another contingent on it? Isn’t it possible the various types of matter is contingent upon something else, the various laws of nature contingent upon something else, everything that exist contingent upon something else?
Ken wrote:Kurieuo wrote: Further to this, I submit that something that has always existed which is not contingent upon anything else is more clear and intuitive.
Ohh! Ohh! I know this one! (Ken on the edge of his seat with his hand raised) that something is God?
Now you're just making yourself look foolish.
I've given
two options, one of which excludes God:
- 1) God being the logically necessary non-contingent being, or
2) Some "Super Force", which can explain and unify absolutely everything. Like God minus the intelligence.
Ken wrote:Kurieuo wrote: So much so that my 7yo daughter gets there must be some foundation which has always been non-contingent upon anything else, not just sequentially in time but foundationally in a hierarchical structure.
The fact your 7 yr old daughter gets it but scientists who know more about the subject than you and I combined does not, tells me that “
getting it” isn’t a result of scientific evidence. So what do you suppose it is the result of?
a. Faith
b. Christian upbringing
c. Daddy’s influence
d. All of the above
Did you just wave a red flag in my face?
Firstly, since when did you represent what scientists believe? I'm sure there are many scientists who see that something must have always existed in some for or another which is itself
also foundational and contingent upon nothing other. They may be Atheist (believing in the physical world) or Theist (believing in God).
Secondly, scientists are not necessarily professional thinkers and logicians so they're authority in biology, physics or what have you doesn't matter. So you appeal to an irrelevant authority. Better to know what philosophers think who are professional reasoners and strict logicians.
Thirdy, look up
Argumentum ad populum. You might find your face beside it as an example of someone prone to use this fallacy as far as what "scientists" believe. (sorry, I couldn't help myself with this jibe)
Fourthly, if what
scientists believe settles the case then, welcome aboard Kenny. I encourage you to research because polls generally do
not support what you suggest. Try 17% atheist 11% agnostic 48% believe in God and the remainder somewhere in between (according to Pew Research surveys)
Lastly, as for my daughter, yes she understood of her own accord that something must have always existed. You don't know how I probe and ask questions, so again, you're talking from ignorance. In fact, sorry to burst your bubble Kenny, but
a summary of the science strongly indicate that belief in God as a creator, an afterlife and some sort of mind-body dualism is quite innate.
I'm sorry if I'm sounding mean here, but I have done nothing here but highlight much emptiness behind your words.
Something I would encourage to avoid looking a little silly is to actually support your words with something.
Don't get me wrong, I kind of like that we have someone here who will just take an opposite position to anything we (Christians) say almost each and every time, but at the same time, it can wear thin when it appears for sake's sake stuff is being said.
Kenny wrote:Kurieuo wrote: And finally, I submit that you also intuitively accepted such in my argument elsewhere. I point you to
this discussion.
There you submitted that matter was the thing that: "
exists necessarily and is the foundational cause for other things that exist."
So it appears when no bias is at play that you opt for #2 out of:
1) God being the logically necessary non-contingent being, or
2) Some "Super Force", which can explain and unify absolutely everything. Like God minus the intelligence.
It's suspicious that you now want to change your mind to say there is no foundation to everything.
You're entitled to change your mind of course, but evidently you're trying to avoid the obvious intuitive logic behind the argument from contingency for a necessary
Something.
In other words, you're letting your bias get in the way.
You appear to accept the logic, but now not the conclusion once seen.
So then, why not rest with #2? What is your repulsion, because it certainly isn't for lack of reason.
The discussion you listed is different than what you are referring to now; in that discussion I was talking about multiple things as a first cause, (various types of matter) right now you seem to be talking about a single first cause.
Different discussion? Yes, but much the same topic. Look at
the title of the thread and the question posed that you answered.
There's no change in topic.
Not being caused by anything else, but causing other things is
one part of what it would be to be non-contingent.
However,
something also being foundational to everything else, where that
something is not founded upon anything else is a second factor to non-contingency.
In that discussion, you identify "
matter" as being the foundational non-contingent something that has always existed:
- So in theory; if some of the matter in the Universe has always existed, (first cause) and is responsible for the existence of other types of matter in the Universe, that would be door #1; exists necessarily and is the foundational cause for other things that exist.
This you support option #2 here above ('
Some "Super Force", which can explain and unify absolutely everything. Like God minus the intelligence').
NOW you're just saying, it's not #1 and it's not #2 above. As you wrote in this thread, and I quote:
- Does there have to be a great something that sits on top of everything else that isn’t contingent upon anything, but everything is in one way or another contingent on it? Isn’t it possible the various types of matter is contingent upon something else, the various laws of nature contingent upon something else, everything that exist contingent upon something else?
The contradiction may not be clear to you, but it is clear to me.
I'm sure it is clear to others.
If you
NOW believe this, that absolutely everything is contingent upon something else and there is no foundational something, then again I encourage you to offer up your arguments as to how and why. Also, it would be absolutely fantastic if you did use science to support your case, because unlike your
mere opinion of
what you believe science says, I really am sincerely interested in having a scientifically compatible view of the world.
But, if you wish to again re-support option #2 above (which I fully encourage you to do because it is a more logically sound position) then we can put it down to a misunderstand, confusion, or something. Let me say that
I found you more logically sound when you posited matter as the necessary foundation for everything else, even if in our discussion here we've identified such is dependent upon physics.
You know, some secular contemporary physicists believe the fundamental force to everything as being energy (in positive and negative forms). I'm not saying I agree with this, since evidently I believe God is the fundamental force. HOWEVER, if you think science is on your site to postulate something so absurd as there not being a common foundation that everything is dependent upon, then you are in serious error.